Davinator
Silver Member
Best of luck and a tip of the hat to all those who are working to change their lifestyle to a simpler way! Maybe some day...
Yes I have been doing it in stages and more time there each year as it is an adjustment, can't run out for a pizza, planning is involved, lol. Best Wishes for the New Year!Uncle Cook welcome to TBN. It would prudent to do your urban-to-rural conversion in small, gradual steps. As they say "don't quit your day job". Rural living can be a challenging, humbling experience. Don't be naive and plunge into a situation that could ruin you financially and emotionally before you KNOW it's what you want.
My wife and I started several years back We have to boys 8-10 now but much younger when we started. We started with meat rabbits and chickens. the chickens we for eggs at the time. We also started a 30 x 30 garden and small greenhouse. We then added ducks and geese for meat and eggs as well. once we had all this down we moved to goats first dairy milking about 4 in a rotational basis to keep us in fresh milk and make our own cheese. We've added meat goats last year as surprisingly goat meat is very tasty. We know have 12 goats total and have kidded out our third set. What we don't put in the freezer we sell. During our goat start up we also started raising broilers a one time deal. First go around was 50 birds. Last summer we went with 90 and sold 50. Pretty much gives us a years supply of chicken for free. We are looking into a sustainable flock for chickens as well as turkey our next adventure. Also just got done doubling the size of the garden to 60x60.
We have done this all over the space of 4-5 years with a lot of research into each aspect, books, web info, local growers and farmers. Let me tell you it has been a lot of work but very reward able. Our feed bill vs old grocery bill is about half, which is good with two growing boys. My wife has gotten into canning and preserving as well as making her own bread. What we don't grow or raise we buy from local farms I.E. berries for making jelly.
Couple good forums such as back yard chickens and goat beat are like this one with lots of great info. Lots of research and lots of work but it has all been worth it. Best of luck to you and enjoy your new lifestyle:thumbsup:
How many acres are you doing all of that on?
I have 20 with about fifteen in woods. The egg chickens are in a 50x50 pen, the ducks roam free as we seem to loose them when we penned them, the broilers are pastured in a 100x100 pen and the main goat pen is 120x120, the egg chickens get free range after they are done laying and I have a Gallagher, easy fence I set up for the goats, but a lot of the time I just let them wonder, but need to keep on eye on them, I'll find them on my work bench, on,top of the cars, are nibbling the rubber protectors to my hydraulics on the tractor. The broiler fence is only up for about 8-12 weeks then when we process the broilers I take the fence down. Planning on extending the goat pen this spring.
Yes I have been doing it in stages and more time there each year as it is an adjustment, can't run out for a pizza, planning is involved, lol. Best Wishes for the New Year!